Hurry Up and Wait: Car Launches Delayed in 2023

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Building cars is hard, and it turns out that building electric cars may be even harder. According to number posted by eggheads at tony consulting firm PwC, roughly a third of new vehicles had their launches skewered in 2023 – with EVs not helping matters in the slightest.


Speaking to the complexity of rolling out machines with which legacy automakers are still grappling, Akshay Singh, an automotive partner at PwC, opined that the “designs are not as mature as the old traditional components,” which may lead to “significant late changes and that contributes to the launch issues." We’ve covered numerous such examples of such delays in the past year, including the Volvo EX90 and frustrations at General Motors.


The latter is an easy target, especially for this website, but there can be no doubting the clustermug which could happen if vehicles of this sort are pushed out to market before they are fully baked. Witness the myriad of problems experienced by some other publications with the Chevrolet Blazer EV, news followed by an alleged cavalcade of similar tales after the likes of outlets such as Edmunds and InsideEVs published their stories. With the vast similarities underpinning the Equinox EV and Blazer EV, not to mention the Ultium guts in the General’s EV pickup trucks, pushing back launch dates probably isn’t a bad idea.


Back at PwC, they go on to elaborate that while 34 percent of all vehicle launches – 38, by their count – experienced delays in 2023, only 5 percent missed their target dates in 2018. While PwC doesn’t immediately give a figure for that year, our (very) unofficial count pegs the number anywhere between 35 and 40, so the sample size should be similar (and, more importantly, relevant). There were a slew of products from Lexus in ’18, plus the Wrangler, Crosstrek, Odyssey, Kona, and Traverse, just to name a few. To these jaundiced eyes, the lone mainstream EV trotted out that year was the Nissan Leaf, though please by all means feel free to correct us in the comments.


What does 2024 portend? With only four days left in this calendar year, we won’t have long to wait and find out.


[Image: GM]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • Syke Syke on Dec 28, 2023

    A lot of this is due to years of the legacy automakers continually living the dream of "if Tesla can do it, then we can do it easily, in less time, and deliver a better product, without breaking a sweat." I've been enjoying the wake-up calls over the past few years.

  • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Jan 01, 2024

    Look out, here comes 2024.

  • Varezhka Renault Twizy, or I guess it's Mobilize Duo now. Neat looking, and these microcars and mopeds are one of the few place where BEVs actually makes sense environmentally.
  • Probert Most KIA/Hyundais are based on the e-gmp modular platform, but not all, and that's where I see Lucid's drivetrain coming in. It is arguably the most efficient, powerful and importantly, compact drivetrain in the business. A car like the Genesis G80 or GV70, which are derived from ICE cars, could benefit from these characteristics as batteries and motors are shoehorned into the chassis.
  • NJRide They need a hybrid.
  • Jonathan This plan for a mass conversion to EVs is simply lunacy. Leave them as niche products for those who want them, no problem. But to push them across the board for everyone in the near future is unnecessary. It's beyond sad that there are people who actually believe these things will "save the planet".
  • The Comedian My owned-for-just-13-months 2022 GTI had the same problem (similar UX OS).It was still broken after it was repaired under a recall. One of the several reasons I sold it back to the dealer. Not officially lemon-lawed, but I didn’t lose much on that one - Other than a headache.
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